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t , '
STATS HISTORICAL SOCIETY
HITT & LOWRY ST. SERV
COLUMBIA HO 65201
t ,1 Progress focuses on Columbia's downtown "" v See Section C
71st Year- N- o. 217 f. W Warning! It's Friday. May 2n. IV79 3 Sections - 26 Pages - 15 Cents
Flat Branch plans include civic center
ByMarkPawIosky
and Kathryn Phillips
Missourian staff writers
After almost eight months and
several proposals, Zuchelli Hunter &
Associates delivered specific working
plans to the city Thursday for the
redevelopment of the Flat Branch area.
If the proposal is carried out, the 44
acres ( 17.6 hectares) of land will in-clude
a civic center, a large hotel,
general office buildings, a retail area,
an apartment complex and housing for
the elderly.
Delivering their proposal to the Land
Clearance for Redevelopment
Authority and about 30 Columbians who
attended the meeting, Donald Zuchelli
and Dan Sasaki said the project would
combine the University's lifestyle with
that of the city.
Two plans were set forth by the
consultants. The first plan calls for the
location of the civic center and hotel to
be built along East Broadway next to
Katy Station restaurant. The
restaurant, because of its historic value
and design, would serve as the hub of
the restaurant- civi- c center area.
An alternate plan puts the civic
center and hotel closer to the center of
the Flat Branch area.
" The plans are uniquely different
than the regional shopping center
plans, because we're using a mixed- us- e
community to tie the University into the
city," Sasaki, a private consultant,
said. Sasaki's firm helped Zuchelli plan
and design the project.
The two areas are linked together by
a system of open spaces. The spaces
would be 80 to 100 feet ( 24 to 30 meters)
wide, and stretch from East Broadway
to Peace Park, located on the
University campus.
" The open spaces along with the
MKT bike paths give the city the op-portunity
to link the rural area of the
south side of town ( the Flat Branch
area) to the downtown area and the
University," Sasaki said.
The University, which will be a main
component in any redevelopment
because of the land it owns in Flat
Branch, threw its support to the
project.
" Chancellor ( Barbara) Uehling and
President ( James) Olson want to see
this plan go forward," Emmett
Klinkerman, a business operations
officer for the University, told the
group.
" Uehling wants to see a design that
uses energy conservation, so people
could walk instead of drive to the Flat
Branch area," he said. Klinkerman
said he thought the open- spa- ce concept
achieved this goal.
Although no date or price was set on
the completion of the project, Zuchelli
outlined the future site. Some of the
specifics are:
An 18,000- square- fo- ot ( 1,620- square- met- er)
main hall that would
seat 1,000 persons.
- Parking areas, consisting of
simple ramp parking, to house cars for
apartments that would be built in the
complex.
A 225- roo- m hotel.
A civic center large enough to
handle medium- to- fairl- y large con-ventions.
' Additional buildings downtown,
however, would aggravate the current
shortage of parking spaces. Mark
Landnim, member of the authority and
( See PARKING, Page 12A)
Insight
Rivalries
plaguing
key panel
Church upsetting
veteran members
By Richard Burt
eg New York Times
WASHINGTON The Senate
Foreign Relations Committee, soon to
play a crucial role in the debate over
the new strategic arms treaty with the
Soviet Union, has become troubled by
internal strains and rivalries under its
new chairman, Frank Church.
When he took over in January,- - the
Idaho Democrat made it dear that he
wantedihe committee, as in the 1950s,
to serve as the focal point -- for
Congressional review of executive- branc- h
foreign policy. He told reporters
that in contrast tohis predecessor, John"
Sparkman, his tenure would be marked
- by aggressive, centralized leadership. -
But in recent interviews, members of
the committee and its staff said Church
has run into trouble trying to restore
the committee to its position of in-fluence.
In particular, they complained
his efforts to bolster his own authority
have bothered other senior members
while sweeping changes in the com-mittee's
staff have created a severe
morale problem.
Some White House officials and
Senate aides fear the committee's
performance in the arms debate could
be hampered by internal
disagreements.
" Nobody likes to air their dirty linen
in public," said a member of the
committee, " but it is fair to say that the
( See CHURCH, Page 12A)
Iranian outburst
Demonstrators raise clenched fists and shout denunciation of the
United States as they march on the U. S. Embassy in Tehran
Thursday. The protest was sparked by a U. S. Senate resolution
UFItcfepbeta
criticizing executions in Iran. The demonstrators demanded the
deaths of President Carter and Sen. Jacob Javits. For details, see
story on Page 3A.
Nation expected to feel diesel pinch
From our wire services
NEW YORK The supply, of diesel
fuel, which powers much of the surface
transportation equipment used in the
United States, has fallen sharply. And
prices, like those of gasoline, are
skyrocketing.
Trucking companies, railroads, bus
lines and barge companies all of
which need diesel fuel are predicting
that agricultural produce may rot in the
fields, that thousands of passengers
may be stranded, that some industrial
production may be lost, that supplies of
coal and oil may not be able to move
and that layoffs will mount if corrective
action is not taken soon.
Seme experts do not believe the
situation is that serious, but many
agree with users who charge that the oil
companies are making a difficult
situation worse.
In the last few weeks the oil com--
panies have cut back their shipments of
diesel fuel between 55 and 85 percent of
levels a year ago. At the same time
prices have risen from about 55 cents a
gallon to 75 cents and higher.
" And when you pay 73 cents a gallon
and only get three or four miles to the
gallon, that's rough," said Les Cad- ma- n,
spokesman for the Teamsters for
a Democratic Union of Detroit
The head of the Fraternal Association
of Steel Haulers warned President
Carter Thursday the nation could be
confronted with a shutdown by in-dependent
truckers because of the price
and shortage of diesel fuel.
The warning by Bill Hill ' in a letter to
Carter came as a small group of in-dependent
truckers in Houston, Texas,
said they would begin shutting down
diesel pumps across the nation by
blocking them with their trucks at
. midnight Monday.
' Hill said his organization would not -
immediately participate in the shut-down
planned by Earl " Blackjack"
Stevens, publisher of CB Truckers
News, but warned the elements were
present for a shutdown such as the one
that was called in 1974.
Stevens said in Houston that about 400
truckers contacted in a telephone poll
earlier in the week vowed to participate
in the shutdown.
" Right now diesel fuel is much
tighter than gasoline," said Arthur
Imperatore, chairman of the A- P-- A
Transport Corp., an interstate common
carrier based in North Bergen, N. J.
The supply situation is uneven around
the country. The West Coast and the
Middle West are the biggest problem
areas, while New England appears
least affected.
Federal officials looking into
shortages of diesel fuel in the Midwest
- farm belt say they believe farmers will
be able to get over the spring planting
hump barely.
" The problems vary greatly from
state to state but I believe we can say
there is, by the narrowest of margins,
enough fuel to allow agricultural
operations to continue through planting
and into the cultivation period of our
crop seasons," said Wendell Butler of
the VS. Department of Energy.
The Carter administration's decision,
announced Wednesday, to import more
crude oil is expected to help ease the
shortage. But any relief, experts
believe, is still months away.
Meanwhile neighborhood dealers are
taking advantage of the nationwide
gasoline shortage scare by inflating
their prices at the pump, a top ad-ministration
official told Congress
Thursday.
Barry Bosworth, director of the
Council on Wage and Price Stability,
( See GAS, Page 14A)
Proposal threatens reassessment measure
By Alan Read
State capital bureau
JEFFERSON CITY The conflict
surrounding the controversial
reassessment issue before the Missouri
General Assembly took a dramatic
twist Thursday, whichmay in effect kin ,
any attempt to pass' " each a measure
during this session. --
"-
Sen. Jack Gannon, DJefferawi
County, proposed a resolution that the
Senate and House" form , a joint
committee to study the issue and
, " hopefully bring a report by the time
thenestGeneralAssembJymeets." .
. .-'-
The House and the Senate each have
reassessment bills stalled in . each
other's committee. The- - House has
tabled the Senate's bill, and the Senate
committee chaired . by Gannon i
deadlocked in a 4-- 4 vote on the House
proposal. . Gannon's resolution, then, is
to drop the reassessment for this .
legislative session and try again next
year.- - ;':':''?:" . . '' " ':
This is- i- n keeping with Gannon's
reason for opposing reassessment he
doesnt feel that It hasreceived
sufficient consideration. .. .; r V
" We need to : know not only now
reassessment is to be naplemented and- pai- d
for, but the ways in which
hardships and, inequities can be
minimized," he told the Senate.
Gannon Is chairman of the State
- Department and Governmental Affairs
committee, which Senate President Pro
Tern Norman MerrelT D- Le- wis County,
assigned, to hear" the House's
, . comprehensive reassessment tall.
- Gannon said be had 23 signatures on
the resolution' already, more than
enough to send. the. resolution to the ' Senate's Committee on Resolutions.
that committee' is expected to act on ' resolution eariy neat week.
i -- a l& Jcfckerto Gannon's resolution
- sme shortly thereafter," when he told
some senators that be would not allow
.- - his committee to take another vote on
" r --- f.
reassessment
By doing mis, Gannon killed a couple
of pending compromise attempts by
those senators who want a
reassessment biD passed this session.
Since MerreD, who is opposed to
statewide reassessment, won't give the
bill to another committee, Sen. John
Schneider, D- S- t Louis County, took the
floor and announced that be would try
to get the 12 signatures required to
extract the bill from Gannon's
committee. , , .; '
Schneider said after the Senate
adjourned that he didn't think he would
have any trouble obtaining those
signatures.
City lawyer
nominated
to judgeship
ByMikeDeMott
Missourian staff writer
It's official. Columbia lawyer Scott
Wright has been nominated by
President Carter for the federal district
judgeship in Kansas City.
" I was called by Sen. ( Thomas)
Eagleton this morning" and told the
news, Wright said Thursday.
Wright's eventual appointment, now
only a formality, has been in the
making since October when Eagleton.
D- M- o., first recommended him for the
job. Wright's name now goes to the U. S.
Senate Judiciary Committee for
review, and then to the full Senate for a
final vote.
Sometime in June, Wright said, he
will go to Washington to appear before
the judiciary committee. Committee
chairman Sen. Edward Kennedy, D- Ma- ss.,
and his colleagues will settle any
remaining questions about Wright's,
nomination.
" They ( Eagleton and his aides) told
me it was forthcoming, so it came as no
surprise. I'm glad it's over, though,"
Wright said. Although he said he wasn't
anxious about getting the nomination, it
was a different story for his wife
Shirley.
" She isn't as patient about waiting as
I am," Wright said.
Two other Missourians should be on
hand for the committee hearing.
William Hungate of Town and Country
and Howard F. Sachs of Kansas City- wer- e
nominated for state federal
judgeships by Carter last week. Sachs
would join Wright in Kansas City, while
Hungate would go to Missouri's
Eastern District.
The judgeships are the result of
congressional action last fall that ex- -
( See WRIGHT, Page 14A)
Court fines feline friend
for catering to cat crowd
ByMarkSelby
Missourian staff writer
Grandbille Berry admitted in
Municipal Court Wednesday that he
was a little " tenderhearted." Judge
Fred Dannov said he was probably
just a " kind human being."
So why was Berry fined $ 200? One
count of unlicensed cats, and
another count of too many cats.
Berry only paid $ 30 of his fine; the
. remainder was stayed provided he
has no more animal violations in the
next six months. But he probably
won't need the fine to convince him
to stay away from cats for awhile.
Berry had five cats last fall at his
home at 210 Price AVe. They lived in
the basement and he left food there
and kept the door open.
More and more cats came antf
Berry continued to feed them. Then
in March six had litters. Berry
realized that things had gotten out of
hand, but he didn't want to take the
cats to the Central Missouri Humane
Society until the kittens had been
weened.
Finally on April 26, a neighbor
reported Berry to Animal Control.
Officers arrived to find 30 cats.
City ordinances allow only four
animals per residence, and require
licenses for cats older than six
months of age. Berry was ticketed
for both.
He now claims to have no more
animals. As he said in court, " They
do keep me home on weekends."
lit town
today
8 a. m. to 5 p. m. Hinkhouse Collection
of Contemporary Art, visitor's center,
Stephens College.
11: 39 to 3: 15 p. m. Watercolors,
acrylics and oils by Fleeta Stephens,
Betty Tegerdine and Martha Straub,
Columbia Art League Gallery,. 12 N.
Tenth St
10 to 5: 30 pjn. Paintings by Chert
Daniel Fritz, Avril Daniebons, Erica
Rutherford, Gallery ef Fine Design,
1013 E. Walnut
Movie listings onPage ZB .
i
Inside
today
Rural doctors
growing scarce
A Universitycurator is worried that
medical " school graduates aren't
flocking to rural Missouri to begin
practice. A state task force on rural'
health reports that only a small per-centage
of the doctors completing their .
. training in Missouri move to rural ,
, areas to provide health care. Read .
about the shortage of country doctors '.','
onpagel2A. ,
'-
-.. .'-. rX---
'. f-:
.. -- .' ' . '.'- - ... ' r- y- :

t , '
STATS HISTORICAL SOCIETY
HITT & LOWRY ST. SERV
COLUMBIA HO 65201
t ,1 Progress focuses on Columbia's downtown "" v See Section C
71st Year- N- o. 217 f. W Warning! It's Friday. May 2n. IV79 3 Sections - 26 Pages - 15 Cents
Flat Branch plans include civic center
ByMarkPawIosky
and Kathryn Phillips
Missourian staff writers
After almost eight months and
several proposals, Zuchelli Hunter &
Associates delivered specific working
plans to the city Thursday for the
redevelopment of the Flat Branch area.
If the proposal is carried out, the 44
acres ( 17.6 hectares) of land will in-clude
a civic center, a large hotel,
general office buildings, a retail area,
an apartment complex and housing for
the elderly.
Delivering their proposal to the Land
Clearance for Redevelopment
Authority and about 30 Columbians who
attended the meeting, Donald Zuchelli
and Dan Sasaki said the project would
combine the University's lifestyle with
that of the city.
Two plans were set forth by the
consultants. The first plan calls for the
location of the civic center and hotel to
be built along East Broadway next to
Katy Station restaurant. The
restaurant, because of its historic value
and design, would serve as the hub of
the restaurant- civi- c center area.
An alternate plan puts the civic
center and hotel closer to the center of
the Flat Branch area.
" The plans are uniquely different
than the regional shopping center
plans, because we're using a mixed- us- e
community to tie the University into the
city," Sasaki, a private consultant,
said. Sasaki's firm helped Zuchelli plan
and design the project.
The two areas are linked together by
a system of open spaces. The spaces
would be 80 to 100 feet ( 24 to 30 meters)
wide, and stretch from East Broadway
to Peace Park, located on the
University campus.
" The open spaces along with the
MKT bike paths give the city the op-portunity
to link the rural area of the
south side of town ( the Flat Branch
area) to the downtown area and the
University," Sasaki said.
The University, which will be a main
component in any redevelopment
because of the land it owns in Flat
Branch, threw its support to the
project.
" Chancellor ( Barbara) Uehling and
President ( James) Olson want to see
this plan go forward," Emmett
Klinkerman, a business operations
officer for the University, told the
group.
" Uehling wants to see a design that
uses energy conservation, so people
could walk instead of drive to the Flat
Branch area," he said. Klinkerman
said he thought the open- spa- ce concept
achieved this goal.
Although no date or price was set on
the completion of the project, Zuchelli
outlined the future site. Some of the
specifics are:
An 18,000- square- fo- ot ( 1,620- square- met- er)
main hall that would
seat 1,000 persons.
- Parking areas, consisting of
simple ramp parking, to house cars for
apartments that would be built in the
complex.
A 225- roo- m hotel.
A civic center large enough to
handle medium- to- fairl- y large con-ventions.
' Additional buildings downtown,
however, would aggravate the current
shortage of parking spaces. Mark
Landnim, member of the authority and
( See PARKING, Page 12A)
Insight
Rivalries
plaguing
key panel
Church upsetting
veteran members
By Richard Burt
eg New York Times
WASHINGTON The Senate
Foreign Relations Committee, soon to
play a crucial role in the debate over
the new strategic arms treaty with the
Soviet Union, has become troubled by
internal strains and rivalries under its
new chairman, Frank Church.
When he took over in January,- - the
Idaho Democrat made it dear that he
wantedihe committee, as in the 1950s,
to serve as the focal point -- for
Congressional review of executive- branc- h
foreign policy. He told reporters
that in contrast tohis predecessor, John"
Sparkman, his tenure would be marked
- by aggressive, centralized leadership. -
But in recent interviews, members of
the committee and its staff said Church
has run into trouble trying to restore
the committee to its position of in-fluence.
In particular, they complained
his efforts to bolster his own authority
have bothered other senior members
while sweeping changes in the com-mittee's
staff have created a severe
morale problem.
Some White House officials and
Senate aides fear the committee's
performance in the arms debate could
be hampered by internal
disagreements.
" Nobody likes to air their dirty linen
in public," said a member of the
committee, " but it is fair to say that the
( See CHURCH, Page 12A)
Iranian outburst
Demonstrators raise clenched fists and shout denunciation of the
United States as they march on the U. S. Embassy in Tehran
Thursday. The protest was sparked by a U. S. Senate resolution
UFItcfepbeta
criticizing executions in Iran. The demonstrators demanded the
deaths of President Carter and Sen. Jacob Javits. For details, see
story on Page 3A.
Nation expected to feel diesel pinch
From our wire services
NEW YORK The supply, of diesel
fuel, which powers much of the surface
transportation equipment used in the
United States, has fallen sharply. And
prices, like those of gasoline, are
skyrocketing.
Trucking companies, railroads, bus
lines and barge companies all of
which need diesel fuel are predicting
that agricultural produce may rot in the
fields, that thousands of passengers
may be stranded, that some industrial
production may be lost, that supplies of
coal and oil may not be able to move
and that layoffs will mount if corrective
action is not taken soon.
Seme experts do not believe the
situation is that serious, but many
agree with users who charge that the oil
companies are making a difficult
situation worse.
In the last few weeks the oil com--
panies have cut back their shipments of
diesel fuel between 55 and 85 percent of
levels a year ago. At the same time
prices have risen from about 55 cents a
gallon to 75 cents and higher.
" And when you pay 73 cents a gallon
and only get three or four miles to the
gallon, that's rough," said Les Cad- ma- n,
spokesman for the Teamsters for
a Democratic Union of Detroit
The head of the Fraternal Association
of Steel Haulers warned President
Carter Thursday the nation could be
confronted with a shutdown by in-dependent
truckers because of the price
and shortage of diesel fuel.
The warning by Bill Hill ' in a letter to
Carter came as a small group of in-dependent
truckers in Houston, Texas,
said they would begin shutting down
diesel pumps across the nation by
blocking them with their trucks at
. midnight Monday.
' Hill said his organization would not -
immediately participate in the shut-down
planned by Earl " Blackjack"
Stevens, publisher of CB Truckers
News, but warned the elements were
present for a shutdown such as the one
that was called in 1974.
Stevens said in Houston that about 400
truckers contacted in a telephone poll
earlier in the week vowed to participate
in the shutdown.
" Right now diesel fuel is much
tighter than gasoline," said Arthur
Imperatore, chairman of the A- P-- A
Transport Corp., an interstate common
carrier based in North Bergen, N. J.
The supply situation is uneven around
the country. The West Coast and the
Middle West are the biggest problem
areas, while New England appears
least affected.
Federal officials looking into
shortages of diesel fuel in the Midwest
- farm belt say they believe farmers will
be able to get over the spring planting
hump barely.
" The problems vary greatly from
state to state but I believe we can say
there is, by the narrowest of margins,
enough fuel to allow agricultural
operations to continue through planting
and into the cultivation period of our
crop seasons," said Wendell Butler of
the VS. Department of Energy.
The Carter administration's decision,
announced Wednesday, to import more
crude oil is expected to help ease the
shortage. But any relief, experts
believe, is still months away.
Meanwhile neighborhood dealers are
taking advantage of the nationwide
gasoline shortage scare by inflating
their prices at the pump, a top ad-ministration
official told Congress
Thursday.
Barry Bosworth, director of the
Council on Wage and Price Stability,
( See GAS, Page 14A)
Proposal threatens reassessment measure
By Alan Read
State capital bureau
JEFFERSON CITY The conflict
surrounding the controversial
reassessment issue before the Missouri
General Assembly took a dramatic
twist Thursday, whichmay in effect kin ,
any attempt to pass' " each a measure
during this session. --
"-
Sen. Jack Gannon, DJefferawi
County, proposed a resolution that the
Senate and House" form , a joint
committee to study the issue and
, " hopefully bring a report by the time
thenestGeneralAssembJymeets." .
. .-'-
The House and the Senate each have
reassessment bills stalled in . each
other's committee. The- - House has
tabled the Senate's bill, and the Senate
committee chaired . by Gannon i
deadlocked in a 4-- 4 vote on the House
proposal. . Gannon's resolution, then, is
to drop the reassessment for this .
legislative session and try again next
year.- - ;':':''?:" . . '' " ':
This is- i- n keeping with Gannon's
reason for opposing reassessment he
doesnt feel that It hasreceived
sufficient consideration. .. .; r V
" We need to : know not only now
reassessment is to be naplemented and- pai- d
for, but the ways in which
hardships and, inequities can be
minimized," he told the Senate.
Gannon Is chairman of the State
- Department and Governmental Affairs
committee, which Senate President Pro
Tern Norman MerrelT D- Le- wis County,
assigned, to hear" the House's
, . comprehensive reassessment tall.
- Gannon said be had 23 signatures on
the resolution' already, more than
enough to send. the. resolution to the ' Senate's Committee on Resolutions.
that committee' is expected to act on ' resolution eariy neat week.
i -- a l& Jcfckerto Gannon's resolution
- sme shortly thereafter," when he told
some senators that be would not allow
.- - his committee to take another vote on
" r --- f.
reassessment
By doing mis, Gannon killed a couple
of pending compromise attempts by
those senators who want a
reassessment biD passed this session.
Since MerreD, who is opposed to
statewide reassessment, won't give the
bill to another committee, Sen. John
Schneider, D- S- t Louis County, took the
floor and announced that be would try
to get the 12 signatures required to
extract the bill from Gannon's
committee. , , .; '
Schneider said after the Senate
adjourned that he didn't think he would
have any trouble obtaining those
signatures.
City lawyer
nominated
to judgeship
ByMikeDeMott
Missourian staff writer
It's official. Columbia lawyer Scott
Wright has been nominated by
President Carter for the federal district
judgeship in Kansas City.
" I was called by Sen. ( Thomas)
Eagleton this morning" and told the
news, Wright said Thursday.
Wright's eventual appointment, now
only a formality, has been in the
making since October when Eagleton.
D- M- o., first recommended him for the
job. Wright's name now goes to the U. S.
Senate Judiciary Committee for
review, and then to the full Senate for a
final vote.
Sometime in June, Wright said, he
will go to Washington to appear before
the judiciary committee. Committee
chairman Sen. Edward Kennedy, D- Ma- ss.,
and his colleagues will settle any
remaining questions about Wright's,
nomination.
" They ( Eagleton and his aides) told
me it was forthcoming, so it came as no
surprise. I'm glad it's over, though,"
Wright said. Although he said he wasn't
anxious about getting the nomination, it
was a different story for his wife
Shirley.
" She isn't as patient about waiting as
I am," Wright said.
Two other Missourians should be on
hand for the committee hearing.
William Hungate of Town and Country
and Howard F. Sachs of Kansas City- wer- e
nominated for state federal
judgeships by Carter last week. Sachs
would join Wright in Kansas City, while
Hungate would go to Missouri's
Eastern District.
The judgeships are the result of
congressional action last fall that ex- -
( See WRIGHT, Page 14A)
Court fines feline friend
for catering to cat crowd
ByMarkSelby
Missourian staff writer
Grandbille Berry admitted in
Municipal Court Wednesday that he
was a little " tenderhearted." Judge
Fred Dannov said he was probably
just a " kind human being."
So why was Berry fined $ 200? One
count of unlicensed cats, and
another count of too many cats.
Berry only paid $ 30 of his fine; the
. remainder was stayed provided he
has no more animal violations in the
next six months. But he probably
won't need the fine to convince him
to stay away from cats for awhile.
Berry had five cats last fall at his
home at 210 Price AVe. They lived in
the basement and he left food there
and kept the door open.
More and more cats came antf
Berry continued to feed them. Then
in March six had litters. Berry
realized that things had gotten out of
hand, but he didn't want to take the
cats to the Central Missouri Humane
Society until the kittens had been
weened.
Finally on April 26, a neighbor
reported Berry to Animal Control.
Officers arrived to find 30 cats.
City ordinances allow only four
animals per residence, and require
licenses for cats older than six
months of age. Berry was ticketed
for both.
He now claims to have no more
animals. As he said in court, " They
do keep me home on weekends."
lit town
today
8 a. m. to 5 p. m. Hinkhouse Collection
of Contemporary Art, visitor's center,
Stephens College.
11: 39 to 3: 15 p. m. Watercolors,
acrylics and oils by Fleeta Stephens,
Betty Tegerdine and Martha Straub,
Columbia Art League Gallery,. 12 N.
Tenth St
10 to 5: 30 pjn. Paintings by Chert
Daniel Fritz, Avril Daniebons, Erica
Rutherford, Gallery ef Fine Design,
1013 E. Walnut
Movie listings onPage ZB .
i
Inside
today
Rural doctors
growing scarce
A Universitycurator is worried that
medical " school graduates aren't
flocking to rural Missouri to begin
practice. A state task force on rural'
health reports that only a small per-centage
of the doctors completing their .
. training in Missouri move to rural ,
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